Diptera-predator

Guides

  • Bembix

    sand wasps

    Bembix is a cosmopolitan genus of approximately 380 species of solitary predatory sand wasps in the family Crabronidae. These wasps are characterized by their large size, often bright coloration, and specialized nesting behavior in sandy substrates. Females excavate burrows in loose sand and provision them with paralyzed flies for their larvae, exhibiting progressive provisioning where prey is delivered as the larva develops. The genus has been documented across North America, Europe, southern Africa, and Australia, with species showing varying degrees of geographic restriction from widespread to narrowly endemic.

  • Crabro

    Shield-handed Wasps, Square-headed Wasps

    Crabro is a genus of solitary wasps in the family Crabronidae, commonly known as shield-handed or square-headed wasps. The genus contains at least 80 described species distributed across the Nearctic and Palaearctic regions (Holarctic). These fossorial wasps nest in sandy soils, constructing multi-celled burrows provisioned with flies (Diptera) for their larvae.

  • Philanthus sanbornii

    Sanborn's Beewolf

    Philanthus sanbornii is a species of beewolf wasp in the family Crabronidae, native to North America. Unlike many congeners that specialize on bees, this species has been documented as a predator of flies (Diptera), particularly small muscoid flies. Females construct simple burrows in sandy soil, capture and paralyze prey, and provision nests for their larval offspring. A five-year study in eastern Massachusetts documented over 3,000 prey items from 108 species of bees and wasps, though subsequent research in Florida identified flies as the primary prey. The species exhibits selective prey capture based on temporal availability, spatial distribution, sex ratio, and body size of available prey.

  • Steniolia

    sand wasps

    Steniolia is a genus of solitary sand wasps in the family Crabronidae, containing approximately 15 described species. All North American species are western in distribution, with four species extending only as far north as Mexico. Females are fossorial, constructing single-celled burrows in dry, powdery soil to provision with paralyzed flies. The genus is notable for ornate coloration, elongated mouthparts adapted for nectar feeding, and distinctive nightly sleeping clusters formed by both sexes.

  • Steniolia elegans

    sand wasp

    Steniolia elegans is a solitary sand wasp in the family Crabronidae. Females dig burrows in dry, powdery soil and provision them with paralyzed flies for their single offspring. The species exhibits progressive provisioning, with females repeatedly hunting and delivering prey throughout larval development. Both sexes form dense, spherical sleeping clusters at night where mating occurs.